The Matrix Reloaded is both the second movie in a trilogy, and, like the
city of Zion, a property near the boiling hot center of an ever
expanding sphere of ideas, images, and associations. The first Matrix
told us the story of a beauty named Trinity, a crew of the ship
Nebuchadnezzar, and mainly Thomas Anderson a.k.a Neo, a software
developer by day, hacker by night, who is offered a choice of pills (he
chooses red, and departure from a software world), of lives (he risks
his own to save his pill proffering mentor Morpheus), and of destinies
(to be just like any other guy, or The One who can lead humanity to
victory). At the end of The Matrix, Neo told the machines that he
would show humans a world without machine control, and soared upward
like Superman, if Superman wore sunglasses and long black coats.

The Matrix Reloaded picks up a bit later from the first film,
and follows Neo as he travels with Trinity, Morpheus, and Link
(brother-in-law to two slain crew) to Zion, through the torn tunnels
that worm across a future version of this world, and again into the
Matrix. Neo flies, and, with Morpheus and Trinity, fights Agents of The
Matrix, upgraded Agents, the uber-upgraded Agent Smith who has some of
Neo’s divine essence, ghostly twins, weapon-wielding yes men, and doors
into and out of hyperspace. Neo is treated as a lover, a god, a punching
bag, and the ultimate decision maker, with the fate of the world in his
hands and terrible choices only he can make.

This is a movie with so many layers and levels that what a reviewer says
about it tells you as much about them as about the movie. Time magazine
gave a spoiler laden account that was so detailed that it missed the
essence. Reviews should say whether a movie is worth seeing, so let’s
get that out of the way. Yes. Yes. A thousand times yes. I don’t mean
that it needs to be seen a thousand times, though undoubtedly some
people will end up seeing it that many times, because within the thin,
fragile frames and dust-like pixels of its effects, lie the questions
and answers, past and future, of human existence. The Matrix Reloaded is
The Matrix reloaded with fractal patterns of other movies of many genres
and cultures, reloaded with people, reloaded with a bigger picture than
we saw in the first film.

EXPLORING THE MATRIX

Alex and Ernest have put together an essay on
the classical origins of the Matrix for serious geeks:
Geeks or
Greeks?

In the first film Morpheus tells Neo that the Matrix represents the
world of 1998, while actually being around 2100. In The Matrix
Reloaded, in a twist almost as big as when Neo learns what The
Matrix is, we learn that the sentient machines have destroyed Zion five
previous times, and each time started over with, we are led to believe,
about 25 humans. Since Zion has what looks like over twenty thousand
inhabitants, each repopulation cycle would take centuries, even
millennia, so the machines have ruled the Earth for over a thousand
years, if the Architect of the Matrix is to be believed. This leaves
room for prequels, and this reviewer would be happy to have them if they
are done by the Wachowski brothers, who will probably be getting more
fruit baskets and gifts from fans than Neo did in Zion.

Science fiction fans usually appreciate homage to previous movies, and readers of SFRevu.com would be advised to take notes during the film if they want to try to catch every parallel to another SF property, many of which, though unintentional, still hyperlink to other properties.

There is the exoskeleton, half Gundam, half loader a la Sigourney Weaver in the end of Aliens, the burrowing towards the center of the earth of The Core, the killer machines of Terminator. The Wachowski brothers seem to enjoy the superpowers of Marvel comics heroes, such as the variable density of the ghost twins similar to the powers of Marvel Comic’s The Vision, the multiple copies of Jaime Madrox the Multiple Man, the flying after a fist hammer blow like Thor, and the fighting style of Daredevil, using whatever works to take the many adversaries down. It’s hard to resist continuing, and this sort of parsing will make for an army of DVD buyers.

The fight scenes include Neo taking on three upgraded Agents, Neo taking on an increasing number of nearly as strong Smiths, Neo taking on weapons wielders, Trinity and Morpheus taking on ghosts and trucks and Agents – oh my! The fight scene with Smith vs. Neo Burly Brawl with 100 Smiths is shockingly long and detailed. My only quibble is that I never understood whether a Smith could be put down, or only stunned, and why, if Neo could fly, he didn’t just do it sooner. The freeway scene is the ultimate answer to that mock order parents give their kids to, “Go play in traffic!” Seeing how this was made, and hearing the risks that Carrie-Anne Moss took, are another reason to anticipate the DVD.

The Matrix Reloaded is much more than the sum of its scenes, and its reference. Seen in the broadest sense, the film offers its tens of millions (possibly hundreds of millions eventually) of viewers a choice of how they want to manage our civilizations on Earth. Further, the movie summarizes the hardest choices of all time, starting with survival in a hot, hostile environment, creating a community, facing genocide from an overwhelmingly superior opponent. The sentinels (the machines that look like sperm or Rastafarian robot heads with natty metal dreads) can even whip around like a dog chasing its tail and throw bombs, harkening back to when apes started to throw rocks simultaneously, and, according to some, also started civilization at the same time.

A few hours before seeing The Matrix Reloaded I gave the keynote to CENIC, the organization that has linked every university with ten Gigabits per second, and every school with one Gbps, so that ankle biters are now gigabyters. CENIC wants to bring this broadband to every home: “Gigabit or bust!” is their slogan, and they are looking for the killer app. In my talk, I said that immersive, photorealistic simulation was essential. After seeing all the homicidal software attacking the humans, I think looking for the “killer app” is an odd choice of words. Be careful what you ask for. You may get it.

According to evolutionary taxonomy, "ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny”, which means that the physical development of an organism unfolds through stages that retrace the evolutionary physical development of the individual’s species. The Matrix Reloaded is a reflection of the vast human historical journey. Future generations will say, “Wachowskis recapitulate humanities.” Take a bow, gentlemen. You did a great job.

After the longest, most heavily populated credit crawl at the end of movie ever the trailer for the final film is shown. The Matrix Revolutions show the exoskeletons and hovercraft in action, and Neo in a chubby rain-drenched showdown with Agent Smith. I’m counting the days until this winter for the conclusion of the Matrix trilogy.